Kansas farmers have started planting their winter wheat crop at the same time the state’s corn harvest has barely begun.
The National Agricultural Statistics Service reports that 5 percent of the state’s winter wheat has now been planted. That’s about the same as last year in mid September and close to the 6 percent average.
But the Kansas corn harvest is getting an unusually late start because planting was delayed by wet spring weather.
The report says only 8 percent of the corn has been harvested, compared with about 50 percent at the same time last year.
In a normal year, at least 24 percent of the corn would have been cut by this late in the season.